Bretagne Classic – Ouest-France

Road Β· One Day
WhenFifth Sunday in August
CourseOne Day
Since1931
FormatOne Day
CategoryWorldTour
Why watch?

A late-August WorldTour one-day race in Brittany where positioning, wind, and short climbs combine to produce unpredictable finishes and opportunistic winners.

Race guide

Bretagne Classic – Ouest-France

Bretagne Classic – Ouest-France is a men's WorldTour one-day race held in late August in Brittany, France. The race typically finishes in Plouay and has been a fixture on the calendar since 1931, offering one of the last major one-day opportunities before the autumn stage races.

The race has been run since 1931 and carries the name of the regional newspaper that founded it, grounding it in Breton identity and local tradition.

Why this race matters

This is late-summer racing on the Breton coast, where the calendar shifts from high summer to the approach of autumn and riders are either sharpening form or chasing last chances. The route rewards opportunism more than pure power, and the exposed roads near the Atlantic mean wind and weather often decide who gets to contest the finish. It's a race where positioning matters as much as legs, and where the winner often comes from a move that looked secondary until it wasn't.

How this race is usually won

The route typically loops around Plouay and the surrounding Morbihan countryside, using a combination of short climbs, narrow roads, and exposed sections where crosswinds can split the field. The finish circuit is usually raced multiple times, with the Ty Marrec and CΓ΄te de Lann Vrihan climbs appearing repeatedly in the closing laps. These aren't long enough to drop pure sprinters outright, but they're steep and frequent enough to thin the group and reward riders who can accelerate out of corners and recover quickly. The race is often won by a small group or a late attacker who reads the final-lap positioning correctly. Pure sprinters can survive if the wind stays calm and the pace stays controlled, but the course design favors puncheurs and riders comfortable in messy, attritional finales.